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03:22
Gaza Strip: Relative shares heart-wrenching account of Gaza doctor's family tragedy
The brother-in-law of a Gaza-based doctor, who lost nine of her ten children in an Israeli airstrike, shared the harrowing account of the moment that devastated the family. Alaa al-Najjar is a pediatrics specialist at the Nasser Hospital in Khan Younis, southern Gaza Strip. When the Israeli air strike hit her home on Friday, she was on duty, treating other victims of the ongoing Israeli attacks on Gaza. The strike killed nine of her ten children. One child and her husband, a surgeon, survived with injuries. Both are currently in intensive care unit (ICU) wards at Nasser Hospital, where the couple works. "My brother has 10 children, and they were displaced, had nowhere to go. He found a rental house to shelter his children, who are between six months and 12 years old. Despite having already lost most of what he had, he chose to stay at home to take care of the children. Every morning, my brother would take his wife to Nasser Hospital, and go back the next morning to pick her up. They would walk back together," said Ali al-Najjar, her brother-in-law. Ali al-Najjar said that he heard a deafening blast that shook the entire area when the explosion occurred. By the time he rushed over to the doctor's home, it had been reduced to rubble, burying children beneath the wreckage. "Yesterday, while we were sitting, we heard the impact of an unexploded missile. Shortly afterward, we heard a massive explosion that shook the whole area of Khan Younis. We called him, since we had been displaced to another area. He didn't answer, so I called my uncle's son to go and check on them. My nephew went there and found the house had been bombed. He told me to hurry because all the children were buried under the rubble. I rushed there, not even knowing how I got there. When I arrived, I saw my brother lying on one side and one of his children on the other side. I searched for the rest of the children, but some were still missing. Two of them were alive. I tried to move my brother, but he was too heavy. The car and the ruins were about 200 meters apart. I was afraid dragging him over the rubble might endanger his life. So my uncle's son and I carried the child and ran to the hospital," said Alaa al-Najjar. The search continued with desperation, but only grievous findings came. "We searched under the rubble. The rocket had destroyed the entire house. We tried calling under the rubble to see if anyone was still alive. I called out for Jubran and the others, but no one answered. There were some shops next to the house that had caught fire. The Civil Defense crew was there and put out the flames. While extinguishing the fire, we discovered the first body. After the fire was out, we began retrieving the remaining burned bodies. This is what we face every day. We retrieved seven bodies. Two more -- an older boy, 13 years old, and a seven-month-old girl -- were still trapped in the rubble," said Alaa al-Najjar. A total 53,939 deaths and 122,797 injuries have been caused in Gaza Strip, since the outbreak of the Israel-Hamas conflict in early October 2023, according to Palestinian health authorities. Israel has recently intensified its operation in Gaza, and is effectively controlling 77 percent of the enclave, according to a statement from the Hamas-run Gaza Government Media Office. SHOTLIST: Khan Younis, Gaza Strip - May 24, 2025 1. Staff getting off from ambulance; 2. Various of people carrying bodies to hospital; 3. SOUNDBITE (Arabic) Ali al-Najjar, Alaa al-Najjar's brother-in-law: "My brother has 10 children, and they were displaced, had nowhere to go. He found a rental house to shelter his children, who are between six months and 12 years old. Despite having already lost most of what he had, he chose to stay at home to take care of the children. Every morning, my brother would take his wife to Nasser Hospital, and go back the next morning to pick her up. They would walk back together."; Khan Younis, Gaza Strip - May 25, 2025 4. Various of medical staff, equipment in hospital; 5. Various of patient under treatment; Khan Younis, Gaza Strip - May 24, 2025 6. SOUNDBITE (Arabic) Ali al-Najjar, Alaa al-Najjar's brother-in-law: "Yesterday, while we were sitting, we heard the impact of an unexploded missile. Shortly afterward, we heard a massive explosion that shook the whole area of Khan Younis. We called him, since we had been displaced to another area. He didn't answer, so I called my uncle's son to go and check on them. My nephew went there and found the house had been bombed. He told me to hurry because all the children were buried under the rubble. I rushed there, not even knowing how I got there. When I arrived, I saw my brother lying on one side and his son on the other. I searched for my brother and the children, but some were still missing. Two of them were alive. I tried to move my brother, but he was too heavy. The car and the ruins were about 200 meters apart. I was afraid dragging him over the rubble might endanger his life. So my uncle's son and I carried the child and ran to the hospital."; Khan Younis, Gaza Strip - May 25, 2025 7. Various of medical staff; Khan Younis, Gaza Strip - May 24, 2025 8. SOUNDBITE (Arabic) Ali al-Najjar, Alaa al-Najjar's brother-in-law: "We searched under the rubble. The rocket had destroyed the entire house. We tried calling under the rubble to see if anyone was still alive. I called out for Jubran and the others, but no one answered. There were some shops next to the house that had caught fire. The Civil Defense crew was there and put out the flames. While extinguishing the fire, we discovered the first body. After the fire was out, we began retrieving the remaining burned bodies. This is what we face every day. We retrieved seven bodies. Two more -- an older boy, 13 years old, and a seven-month-old girl --were still trapped in the rubble."; Khan Younis, Gaza Strip - May 25, 2025 9. Residents walking outside hospital, destroyed hospital. [Restrictions: No access Chinese mainland]
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